argtit shop A lb are tO- attend Cb tg- `11/2 Szoway The Free Press Changes Its 'Israel-Occupied' Policy L • IIIS ROTH CLOTHES "The most comfortable clothes you can wear" teet4 oesize/, conseitant azk g- (9V Are&eatay tat& t_zz& and 0,o-t4 taduOiz& HARRY SOLOMON a-rittitOhop: The Latest Styles In The Best Of Taste BLOOMFIELD PLAZA AT MAPLE AND TELEGRAPH BIRMINGHAM, MICHIGAN • PHONE 626-9810 MARVIN E. KLEIN, M.D. CERTIFIED BY THE AMERICAN BOARD OF DERMATOLOGY Announces the Association of STANLEY ALFRED, M.D. Former Chief of Dermatology, Hurley Medical Center MEDICAL, SURGICAL & COSMETIC TREATMENT OF SKIN, HAIR, NAILS & VEINS SKIN CANCER ACNE ACNE SCARS FACE PEELING DERMASANDING COLLAGEN PHOTOAGING RETIN-A EVALUATION VEIN SCLEROSING WARTS HAIRLOSS PSORIASIS 18161 W. THIRTEEN MILE ROAD, SUITE D2 JUST W. OF SOUTHFIELD BEACON HILL MEDICAL BUILDING Saturday-Wednesday' and evening hours available Special to The Jewish News E Oct,61)et‘ 20t // KAREN A. KATZ 559-0620 arly in March, I — like many others — reacted quite strongly to a Benson cartoon in the Detroit Free Press. I called and wrote to Publisher David Lawrence to express my outrage at the publication of that cartoon, featuring a poster of a kafiyeh-clad boy beneath the headline: Wanted: Dead or Buried Alive. (The cartoon, and reaction to it, prompted Lawrence to write a column questioning whether cartoons should be fair.) At the same time I told Lawrence that as a journalist and as a Jew I took issue with what I considered slanted or unfair headlines on stories regarding Israel, and the use of the datelines "Israeli- occupied West Bank" and "Israeli-occupied Gaza!" I wrote that the Free Press didn't use datelines such as "Soviet-occupied Afghanis- tan" or "Syrian-occupied Beirut!' Lawrence replied that my point about "oc- cupied" territory struck him as important and said he would share that observation with several key Free Press Fieldcrest & Martex Blankets to . up Fab -Flannel Sheet Sets 8 Colors 50% OFF 40% OFF FIELDCREST POPULARITY TOWELS 1st Quality 100% Cotton Looped Terrys - 10 Colors Now 2 for $10.99 Bath - Reg. $14 Now 2 for $8.99 Hand - Reg. $9.75 Now 2 for $4.99 Wash - Reg. $3.75 Jumbo Bath Sheet - Reg. $26. . . . Now 2 for $24.99 Now 2 for $11.99 Mat - Reg. $14 Soft Padded Toilet Seats Select Group Reg. $34 NOW 15.99 Come. In and See More of Our Selection Don't Miss This Event! HOURS: SEVENTH HEAVEN 855-3777 M., Tues., Sot. 10-6 HUNTER'S SQUARE Wed.-Fri. 10,9 i._, ...,,,, I • — AI ORCHARD LAKE At 14 MILE Sun. 12-5. 86 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1988 WS4 1. '"' c '' rc:4; . up the question of "occupied!' I was told that "Israeli oc- cupied" remained Free Press policy, and that instances I had seen where only "oc- cupied" was used were incon- sistencies that would be corrected. After Yom Kippur came the news from executive editor Heath Meriwether that "after considerable thought and discussion we're changing our style on West Bank and Gaza Strip datelines to drop the word 'occupied' and the phrase 'Israeli-occupied'. The key reason for the change is the conclusion that we can neither make a strong case for dateline use of 'occupied' only from territories ad- ministered by the Israeli military nor be 100 percent accurate in extending the use of 'occupied' to datelines from certain other locations. When appropriate and relevant, such references will appear in articles, as they do now, but they should not be in the datelines.This change in datelines is by no means an attempt to change history, geography or present reality but to keep descriptions where they have the most meaning — in the body of the story!' Actress Sigourney Weaver: Alien On Israeli Kibbutz? ARTHUR J. MAGIDA Special to The Jewish News SPECIAL PURCHASE editors. He wrote, as he has in many Free Press columns, . about the paper's desire to be fair and accurate. He asked me to observe the paper's coverage of the Mideast close- ly for a period of 30 days and to pretend that I was the editor — and at the end of that time contact him again to tell him how I would have done things differently. In June, I visited the Free Press and discussed with Lawrence and reader representative Joe Grimm how I would have written cer- tain headlines to make them less sensational and more descriptive of the accompany- ing stories. Again I question- ed the use of the term "Israeli-occupied" and asked what the paper's policy was, and why the term "occupied" was used only in reference to Israel. I said it was ironic that in other instances, where a country was "occupied" by an aggressor, the term was not used, but in Israel's case, where she is in the position of "occupier" as a result of defending outside aggression, it was. In August, I again wrote to comment on recent headlines which I felt were more ac- curate and fair. I also brought A ctress Sigourney Weaver — she of the high cheekbones and large brown eyes — has played some terrific roles, among them an attention- getting part in the movie, Alien but few people know that in the early 1970s she was thinking of taking on a new real-life role: becoming a Jew. In an interview in Parade magazine, Weaver discloses that she went to the "Hill of Isaac" kibbutz in Israel dur- ing a period when she was considering converting to Judaism. "My father thought, "My God, what have I done?' I was dating a lot of Jewish guys. All my good friends were Jewish. And they were all so funny." "I couldn't understand how anybody could be anti- — Semitic. It seemed to me that everyone should be absolutely pro-Jewish. You just couldn't find brighter, more entertain- ing people anywhere!' But Weaver was disillu- sioned when she got to her kibbutz, which she had ex- pected would be "so roman- tic" and where she would be "working in the fields like a pioneer?' "Not at all. We were stuck in the kitchen. I operated a potato-peeling machine. It blew up. It was boring. Not what I dreamed of. And the Israelis aren't at all funny!" Weaver now muses that, by going to Israel, she was hop- ing to find a sense of com- munity, something she has been seeking most of her life. "I was sort of an isolated kid," she said. "As you grow older, you finally develop a com- munity of your own." Community is "one of the major reasons," said Weaver — she now resides in New York — and "one of the great pleasures of acting. You don't work alone. It's a group effort, each play or film is a com- munity all of itself!' Do Jews Selectively Charge Anti-Semitism? In an editorial last week, The Nation magazine came up with a new political ax- iom: American Jews' propen- sity to charge someone with anti-Semitism is directly pro- portional to that person's degree of support toward Israel. Triggering The Nation's comments was the reaction of the Anti-Defamation League's Abe Foxman to reports that Fred Malek had obeyed Richard Nixon's orders in the early 1970s to count Jews working in the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Earlier this year, George Bush appointed Malek deputy chairman of the